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I migrated a new database table here it looks like this:

  create_table "books", :force => true do |t|
    t.string   "books_title"
    t.integer  "books_count"
    t.integer  "user_id"
    t.datetime "created_at",   :null => false
    t.datetime "updated_at",   :null => false
  end

and my models/books.rb looks like this:

class Books < ActiveRecord::Base
  attr_accessible :books_count, :books_title
end

and i'm trying to create new record using this code:

<%= form_for(@Books) do |f| %>

  <%= f.label :books_title, 'Book Title' %> 
  <%= f.text_field :books_title %>

<% end %>

then i'm getting error: undefined method books_title for NilClass:Class

also my controllers/books_controller.rb looks like this:

class BooksController < ApplicationController
end

Please help me.I'm very new to ruby, what shoud I do what command i need to run? Thanks!

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  • its actually "@books" not "@Books" and I dont see this line in your controller, "@books = Books.all"(actually, it should be book, model names are singular and table names are plural).. welcome to rails...
    – beck03076
    Jan 9, 2014 at 6:44

3 Answers 3

1

Its actually "@books" not "@Books" and I dont see this line in your controller, "@books = Books.all" (actually, it should be book, model names are singular and table names are plural)..

Welcome to rails...

I would do this, goto your app path and type,

rails g scaffold book title:string count:integer user_id:integer

The above command will generate everything for you from routes, model, migration, controller, view to test cases.

Need not worry about anything. Just

run rake db:migrate (it would probably throw an error since you already have "books" table, drop it)

Now visit, http://localhost:3000/books, you will see the books list(index view). Now, goto your books controller and start your learning method by method.

3
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You must create @book instance for form_for method like this.

class StocksController < ApplicationController
  def new
    @book = Book.new
  end 
end

And view.

<%= form_for(@book) do |f| %>

  <%= f.label :books_title, 'Book Title' %> 
  <%= f.text_field :books_title %>

<% end %>

And you must have create method in your books controller.

class StocksController < ApplicationController
  # ...
  def create
    @book = Book.create(book_params)
  end 
  private 
  def book_params
    params.require(:book).permit(:books_title)
  end
end

I recommend you to use :title instead of :books_title. Because it's a little redundant.

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also my controllers/books_controller.rb looks like this:

class StocksController < ApplicationController end

Rails has a naming convention, of using the same name for the file as for the controller, so you should either rename StocksController to BooksController or books_controller.rb to stocks_controller.

In any case, you are going to need an action in it, that initializes the book object for the form. And a create action, to save it. Another thing, it's standard to name your variable as a lowercase variable, and in singular, so it would be @book.

class BooksController < ApplicationController
  def new
    @book = Book.new
  end 

  def create
    @book = Book.create(params)
  end 
end

And update your form to be

<%= form_for(@book) do |f| %>

  <%= f.label :books_title, 'Book Title' %> 
  <%= f.text_field :books_title %>

<% end %>

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